Lodi News-Sentinel

Hurricane Eta could travel near Florida

- By Joe Mario Pedersen and David Harris

ORLANDO, Fla. — South Florida is in Hurricane Eta's cone of uncertaint­y as the storm batters Nicaragua's coast with heavy rain and 140 mph winds, the National Hurricane Center said in its 4 p.m. EST update.

The storm is expected to weaken significan­tly as it travels through Central America before taking a turn to the northeast and back out to the Caribbean Sea later this week. It's then expected to pass over Cuba and approach South Florida on Sunday as a tropical storm. However there is "significan­t uncertaint­y" among the models about where Eta will go after leaving Central America so it's still too early to say what impact, if any, the storm will have on Florida, forecaster­s said.

The heart of powerful storm moved ashore in Nicaragua Tuesday with devastatin­g winds and rains that had already destroyed rooftops and caused rivers to overflow, the NHC said.

"While it is too soon to determine the exact timing, magnitude, and location of possible impacts from wind and rainfall, interests in Cuba, southern Florida and the Florida Keys should monitor the progress of Eta through the week," forecaster­s said.

The 12th hurricane of the year is located about 15 miles south-southeast of Puerto Cabezas, Nicaragua with maximum sustained winds at 140 mph, according to the NHC's 4 p.m. update Tuesday.

The compact storm has hurricane-force winds that extend outward to 25 miles from its center and tropical-storm-force winds reaching up to 115 miles.

Eta is moving at a slow pace of 5 mph, making it likely to be a big danger of torrential downpours and life-threatenin­g flash floods over parts of Nicaragua and Honduras as it approaches and eventually moves over the coast of Central America, forecaster­s said. Central America should begin feeling Eta's winds and rain sometime Monday afternoon.

Eta may produce between 15 and 25 inches of rain, with isolated highs of 35 inches, across central and northern Nicaragua into much of Honduras through Thursday, forecaster­s said.

Eastern Guatemala and southern Belize may see between 10 to 20 inches through Thursday as well. Five to 10 inches of rain, with a potential for 15 inches, will fall across parts of Jamaica, the Cayman Islands, and southern Haiti over the same period of time.

A hurricane warning is in effect for the coast of Nicaragua from the Honduras/ Nicaragua border to Sandy Bay Sirpi. The northeaste­rn coast of Honduras from Punta Patuca to the Honduras/ Nicaragua border and the coast of Nicaragua from south of Sandy Bay Sirpi to Laguna de Perlas are under a tropical storm warning.

Dangerous storm surge will raise water levels by as much as 14 to 21 feet above normal levels within the Hurricane Warning area along the coast of Nicaragua.

Life-threatenin­g surf and rip current conditions, due to swells produced by Eta, are expected to impact parts of the Central America coast and the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico over the next few days.

Forecast models show Eta dying down to a tropical depression while over land, but then turning back into the Caribbean and heading northeast toward Cuba by the weekend.

 ?? INTI OCON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Women walk next to fallen trees as Hurricane Eta makes landfall in Bilwi, Puerto Cabezas, Nicaragua on Tuesday.
INTI OCON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Women walk next to fallen trees as Hurricane Eta makes landfall in Bilwi, Puerto Cabezas, Nicaragua on Tuesday.

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